The dilemma of privacy chains is actually quite real: the more emphasis placed on privacy protection, the harder it is for institutions to accept; the more they compromise on compliance, the more the transparent ledger looks like a regular public chain. There is a core issue that needs to be addressed here.
Recently, I came across a practical solution—Hedger. It attempts "compliant privacy" directly on EVM, and it's not just theoretical; the alpha version has already been released for developers to try out.
The logic of this solution is quite clear: transaction details can be kept confidential externally, but can prove to auditors that "this transaction complies with the rules." How is this achieved? The core is combining zero-knowledge proofs with homomorphic encryption. Zero-knowledge proofs are responsible for "I can prove I have no issues," while homomorphic encryption handles "perform necessary calculations and validations without decrypting." Simply put: you don't need to put all transaction details on-chain for everyone to see, nor do you have to keep risk control and regulation outside just for privacy.
What is the more practical significance? KYC verification, whitelist management, quota limits, risk thresholds, periodic audits—these financial scenarios fundamentally require "information that can be verified but doesn't need to be fully public." If Hedger can run stably, then doing regulated lending, risk liquidation, and on-chain settlement on EVM can shift from "whether it can be done" to "how to improve user experience."
The main points to watch are: real feedback from developers during the alpha stage, the actual performance overhead, and whether that set of audit interfaces can truly achieve "verifiable, traceable, and explainable." Privacy isn't about hiding, and compliance isn't about restriction—if this set of tools can unify both, then it's definitely worth looking forward to.
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The dilemma of privacy chains is actually quite real: the more emphasis placed on privacy protection, the harder it is for institutions to accept; the more they compromise on compliance, the more the transparent ledger looks like a regular public chain. There is a core issue that needs to be addressed here.
Recently, I came across a practical solution—Hedger. It attempts "compliant privacy" directly on EVM, and it's not just theoretical; the alpha version has already been released for developers to try out.
The logic of this solution is quite clear: transaction details can be kept confidential externally, but can prove to auditors that "this transaction complies with the rules." How is this achieved? The core is combining zero-knowledge proofs with homomorphic encryption. Zero-knowledge proofs are responsible for "I can prove I have no issues," while homomorphic encryption handles "perform necessary calculations and validations without decrypting." Simply put: you don't need to put all transaction details on-chain for everyone to see, nor do you have to keep risk control and regulation outside just for privacy.
What is the more practical significance? KYC verification, whitelist management, quota limits, risk thresholds, periodic audits—these financial scenarios fundamentally require "information that can be verified but doesn't need to be fully public." If Hedger can run stably, then doing regulated lending, risk liquidation, and on-chain settlement on EVM can shift from "whether it can be done" to "how to improve user experience."
The main points to watch are: real feedback from developers during the alpha stage, the actual performance overhead, and whether that set of audit interfaces can truly achieve "verifiable, traceable, and explainable." Privacy isn't about hiding, and compliance isn't about restriction—if this set of tools can unify both, then it's definitely worth looking forward to.